Biography

Childhood & Family Life

Monday 23rd March 1925: Born in Margate. Photographed here aged 9 months…David aged 9 months
DW_19311931: Photographed with one of the many Nannies…
DW_ToyCar…and in a little pedal car!

Second World War

1940: The Watkin Family leave Margate to live in a residential hotel in Clifton Gardens, Maida Vale, then on to Reading and finally Bushey. This photograph shows David’s parents and his three older brothers. (From left to right: Peter, Nim, Mother (Trixie), Father, Brother & David)Watkin Family

4th February 1944: David joins the British Army

22nd March 1945: The day before David’s 20th birthday, he is sent to the Brussels Garrison

Watkin parents in 19461946: David’s parents – photographed with a looted Rolleiflex.

DW_Parents
October 1947: Released from the Army, aged 23

Freedom

1st January 1948: Joins small Film Unit based at Waterloo Station.

1953: Boyfriend, Iain Somers, moves into David’s small flat

Success

passport1964: First feature…

1960′s: Iain opens an antiques shop, in Kensington Church Street (notice DW’s flash motor in the bottom right corner).Iain Somers

Iain Somers in the Antiques Shop

Iain Somers


Late 1960′s:
David buys a mews house in Brighton, with Iain. It becomes a weekend and holiday home, which they nip down to from their home in Roehampton.
Over a two or three year period, they move from No.4 to No.5, then across the mews to No.6. David makes No.6 his full time home (gradually including No.7 and No.8 as the years progress).

April 1974: After 21 years together, Iain dies tragically.

Brighton Life

1986: Academy Award winner for Out of Africa

1998: First volume of the autobiography ‘Why is There Only One Word for Thesaurus?’ published.

February 2006: After months of deliberation, David commits to a Civil Partnership with one of his companions, Nicholas John Hand. An extremely low-key affair, witnessed by David’s friends Rachael Adams & David Brown, and photographed by their son, Frank.
Civil Ceremony David Watkin

February 2007: David diagnosed with prostate cancer

December 2007: Second Volume of autobiography, ‘Was Clara Schumann a Fag Hag?’ published

19th February 2008: David dies at home at 10.15pm, 4 days short of his 83rd birthday.

“Above all, I am surrounded by love, and its little brother laughter, and I am happy. I don’t even have a problem with death. Pain is at an end, and we, who love, and are loved are always part of each other’s lives.”

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One Response to Biography

  1. David Byrne on November 2, 2009 at 1:54 pm

    Re: “19th February 2008: David dies at home at 10.15pm, 4 days short of his 83rd birthday.”

    Actually this is incorrect, he was a month short of his 83rd birthday.

    Thanks for your continued work on the site. It’s great to see more being added.

    David Byrne

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Welcome

We welcome you to the David Watkin website that celebrates the work and life of that remarkable cinematographer. We trace his contributions to documentary, commercial and feature film-making, relating his achievements and innovations to the very character of the man, complex and perverse, innocent yet knowing at the same time. He wore his learning lightly but with much seriousness.

Find out what it was to work with David Watkin on sound stage and beyond, to keep him supplied with jokes, food, music, books, pictures and all sorts of other intriguing information. Read within the memories of friends, critics, colleagues and other amused observers.

We invite you to add your own impressions to our interactive database.

Invitation to Contribute…

The website was initiated as a response to the hundreds of friends of David Watkin who wished to contribute to an archive of memories of this remarkable man. The editors are the designer Rachael Adams and the historian Chris Mullen who were in contact with him in Brighton on a weekly, often daily, basis.

Copyright of the words and images to be found here is held by the editors from their personal collection, and by contributing friends and colleagues who have answered the appeal.

DW’s Autobiographies

Sadly, the remaining stock of the two volumes of David Watkin's autobiography has been destroyed.

However limited numbers remain, which will become available for sale shortly.
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